... medical thought, that a true knowledge of the actions of poisonous and medicinal agents can only be arrived at by a thorough investigation of their effects on the animal organism in a state of health, combined with observations of their effects in... Proceedings - Page 11by Royal Society of Edinburgh - 1880Full view - About this book
| Natural history - 1885 - 280 pages
...of the blood, but varies in its proportions from oi per cent to 0.15 per cent. 2. The sugar content of the blood in the right and left sides of the heart is the same. Differences between the proportion of sugar in arterial and venous blood are not constant... | |
| 1869 - 692 pages
...BLOOD. Few points of experimental physiology would appear to be more easy to determine than the relative temperature of the blood in the right and left sides of the heart; nevertheless, it is one respecting which there is great discrepancy of opinion ; and we find M. Lombard,... | |
| Reginald Edward Thompson - 1879 - 292 pages
...and oozing of the blood into the pericardium. Foramen Ovule open is a condition leading to admixture of the blood in the right and left sides of the heart. It is a cause of cyanosis or morbus caeruleus, but unless the valve be permanently open this condition... | |
| James Greig Leask - Examination Questions - 1882 - 124 pages
...which the phenomena may be susceptible. 8. Give the physiological, physical, and chemical properties of the blood in the right and left sides of the heart. 4. Give the development of the red corpuscles, their average proportion, and functions in health. 5.... | |
| Royal Society of Edinburgh - Science - 1880 - 850 pages
...combined with observations of their effects in diseased conditions. A wide stream of research already flows from this conviction, and practical medicine...lesions of the nervous system. Bernard was adored by his pupils, not only because of his greatness as an investigator and as a teacher, but also on account... | |
| Royal Society of Edinburgh - Science - 1880 - 874 pages
...combined with observations of their effects in diseased conditions. A wide stream of research already flows from this conviction, and practical medicine"...lesions of the nervous system. Bernard was adored by his pupils, not only because of his greatness as an investigator and as a teacher, but also on account... | |
| Medicine - 1878 - 830 pages
...the semester he performed a number of very interesting experiments for the purpose of ascertaining the temperature of the blood in the right and left sides of the heart, as well as that of the walls of the heart itself. In one series of experiments, which were performed... | |
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